NATION
Counting Votes, Facing Threats: What It's Like to Run an Election
NATION
Photojournalist says gangs in Haiti 'have formed themselves into unions of power'
NATION
Franklin gets his moment in the spotlight in new ‘Peanuts’ special
NATION
Neil deGrasse Tyson reacts to US intel that Russia could attempt to deploy a space-based weapon
NATION
Counting Votes, Facing Threats: What It's Like to Run an Election
NATION
Photojournalist says gangs in Haiti 'have formed themselves into unions of power'
NATION
Franklin gets his moment in the spotlight in new ‘Peanuts’ special
NATION
Neil deGrasse Tyson reacts to US intel that Russia could attempt to deploy a space-based weapon
FEATURED
Cindy McGhee: How One Woman Built A Business From Scratch
One Of Fastest Growing Companies In The Country: Building The Next Generation Of Entrepreneurs (and Homeowners)
CONTRIBUTOR
Dr. Jerry Goodwin
MORE TALK OF GREENWOOD STORIES
FEATURED
The TINA TURNER Musical Reveals Trials And Triumphs
The arc of Tina Turner’s career is well-known. Although Ike’s story is lesser known, he had a powerful influence on Tina’s life and career. They had a family together, and he witnessed Tina rise to superstardom.
Ike Turner may have had multiple sides to his personality, according to Tulsans who knew him and the actor who plays him in the musical, “Tina, The Tina Turner Musical,” coming to Tulsa next week. However, the Ike Turner the public has seen is a violent man.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Miss Juneteenth to be shown on Mother’s Day at Circle Cinema, May 12
The film features a former beauty queen turned hard working single mom as she prepares her rebellious teenage daughter for the Miss Juneteenth pageant. She hopes to keep her daughter from repeating the same mistakes in life that she made. The movie was released in 2020 during the Covid 19 pandemic.
CONTRIBUTOR
Talk of Greenwood
MORE TALK OF GREENWOOD STORIES
FEATURED
Wendell Franklin Retires As Tulsa’s Police Chief
Tulsa’s first Black police chief will retire July 31 and assume a new position leading security for the BOK Financial Corp. Chief Wendell Franklin was hired as the City of Tulsa’s 40th police chief on Feb. 1, 2020, just before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Early in Franklin’s career, he was called upon to create secure spaces for a series of high-profile events significant in the Black community, including the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter rallies, Black Panther marches, and the 2021 centennial anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMNERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Report Shows Minimal Progress For Black Tulsans
The City of Tulsa has released its annual Equality Indicators report for 2023 revealing that the needle marking progress in opportunities and well-being for disadvantaged communities has hardly moved during the last six years of reporting. The Indicators reports measure equality disparities among populations across various themes and topics, assessed using more than fifty-four metrics. The Oklahoma Eagle, as it has each year, closely examines how racial and community disparities affect North Tulsans.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
COVID Learning Losses to Cost Students Billions in Lost Income
Oklahoma Students Will Suffer Most. For the thousands of pupils in Tulsa – and across Oklahoma – who struggled with school during the COVID-19 pandemic, those challenges are destined to impact their earnings potential in the workplace. Students of the COVID-19 era will likely take home thousands of dollars less in wages annually than they would have had the pandemic not occurred, according to a new education study.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
Foundation Supports Programs For TPS Pupils
While Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) receives the majority of its funding from state tax dollars, millions of dollars in local grants and contributions boost the TPS education budget annually. Additional charitable donations also support public education in a variety of ways under the auspices of the Foundation for Tulsa Schools (FTS).
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
Their
Minutes after the Oklahoma Medical Examiner’s summary report was shared, regarging Nex Benedict’s death, by the Owasso Police Department on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter) Libs of TikTok account followers began to demand an apology from local and national media, LGBTQ advocacy groups and Oklahomans who attributed the violence and hatred experienced by Nex to their rhetoric.
CONTRIBUTOR
Ross D. Johnson
MORE LOCAL STORIES
FEATURED
The Story Of Greenwood Will Survive Any Court Decision
During the 100th anniversary of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, Viola Ford Fletcher’s voice didn’t crack while seated before the U.S. House of Representatives, describing the violence of the white mob in her childhood community of Greenwood, the Tulsa, Oklahoma district, known as Black Wall Street. “I still see Black men being shot, Black bodies lying in the street. I still smell smoke and see fire,” Fletcher told the U.S. House Judiciary Subcommittee in May 19, 2021.
CONTRIBUTOR
Deon Osborne
MORE ROSS D. JOHNSON STORIES
FEATURED
Women’s History Month Profile – Ashley Townsend teaches how to save money and create generational wealth
The Oklahoma Eagle conducted an interview with Ashley Townsend of Chase Bank. She is vice president community manager at the bank. Joining in the interview was Kim Marsh, a news and editorial contributor at the newspaper. (The interview was edited for clarity and conciseness.)
CONTRIBUTOR
Dr. Jerry Goodwin
MORE DR. JERRY GOODWIN STORIES
FEATURED
Mayoral Candidates Make Their Pitches
During a broad-ranging discussion, the candidates highlighted the following key topics: the challenges of the unhoused and the related problems of mental health; street improvement delays; bipartisanship and co-governance with Tulsa area Native American tribes; and issues with mass transit.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Focus on The Contenders for Tulsa Mayor
The three candidates registered for the Tulsa Mayor’s race are City Councilor Jayme Fowler, Tulsa County Commissioner Karen Keith, and Monroe Nichols, former Oklahoma House Representative of the 72nd District. Other candidates may still enter the race.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
National Association of Black Journalists Regional Conference To Take Place In Tulsa, April 12-13
The National Association of Black Journalists Region III will host its annual conference in Tulsa, April 12-13. This theme of the event is “Press and Prosperity: NABJ Meets Black Wall Street.”
CONTRIBUTOR
Dr. Jerry Griffin
MORE DR. JERRY GOODWIN STORIES
FEATURED
Jennettie Marshall: Guiding Tulsa Schools Through Troubled Waters
Elected to the Tulsa School Board in 2016, Marshall is the longest serving member of the board - a panel of seven elected officials charged with overseeing the running of all 77 Tulsa Public Schools. She makes it her business to push for high standards in education and facilities for the schools in her district, which is composed of more than a dozen schools, including several institutions that have been vital for northsiders - McLain, Central High School, Burroughs, and Hawthorne Elementary among others. But Marshall’s dominion on the board is not limited to North Tulsa. She is the self-styled watchman for all TPS schools.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
MORE GARY LEE STORIES
FEATURED
A Brief Primer On Tulsa School Board Elections
School board elections nationwide have taken on more importance than ever as local school boards grapple with several pressing issues. First, the hot topics are student learning losses resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, a chronic shortage of teachers, and ideological issues which in earlier eras were not prominent in non-partisan school board elections and decision making.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
Tulsa Public Schools Reckoning Imminent
Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent Ebony Johnson is pulling out all the stops to improve the academic achievement scores of Tulsa students in the state testing that is scheduled to take place in April. In February, the Oklahoma State Board of Education formally adopted new rules setting minimum standards for student test performance. The board’s apparent objective is to sanction the TPS school district if it fails.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
After the closing of Juno Medical-Tulsa, what’s the state of health care for North Tulsa?
In a posting on Meta (also known as Facebook), the social media platform, Dr. Jabraan Pasha, Juno Tulsa’s executive director, said, “The information we were given was Juno Headquarters lost support from a major national investor, which significantly impacted the company’s financials. As a result, he added, the company was suddenly closing its two newest clinics in Atlanta and Tulsa.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
MORE GARY LEE STORIES
FEATURED
Women’s Business Summit Celebrates Successes
When the Greenwood Women’s Business Center opened two years ago, it promised to provide women in Tulsa – particularly Black women and other women of color – a hand in launching and growing their businesses.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE STORIES KIMBERLY MARSH
FEATURED
KanDee Washington, TPS District 2 Candidate
The Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) District Two school board seat is considered a “revolving door” by residents in the area. Candidate KanDee Washington, campaigning for the seat, wants to create more stability in the district's representation.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Ernie Fields Jr. Passes: Noted musician and producer in Hollywood
Critically acclaimed musician and multi-instrumentalist Ernie Fields Jr. passed away at his home in Pasadena, Calif., on March 8. He was 89 years old.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE STORIES
FEATURED
School Board Candidates Are Seeking Your Vote
Four candidates competing in the upcoming Tulsa School Board elections used a Feb. 27 public forum at the University of Tulsa to make a case for you to vote for them.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Following The Passing Of Nex Benedict, Serious Questions Linger
Owasso, Okla. – On the morning of Feb. 26, a group of gender equality advocates and supporters gathered on a busy intersection in this Tulsa suburb, in the shadow of Owasso High School, where two weeks earlier, three students bullied and beat Nex Benedict, a 16-year-old sophomore at the school who identified as non-binary.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
MORE GARY LEE STORIES
FEATURED
The Fate Of Oklahoma Race-based Law May Be Decided Soon
‘UNQUALIFIED’ JUDGE TO Make Ruling
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
State School Superintendent: No Teacher Pay Increases
Oklahoma Teacher Shortage Continues
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
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Tulsa Public Schools To Expand Student Free Meals Program
Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) will expand its free meals program to include all students in district schools beginning in the 2024-’25 school year. Free breakfast and lunch are already automatically provided to all elementary school students in the district.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
Goodwin Launches Campaign For State Senate Seat
State Rep. Regina Goodwin, District 73, stood before a jubilant crowd on Saturday, Jan. 6, flanked by campaign signs that will soon occupy the landscape of state senate district communities. The scene was the two-term representative’s announcement of her candidacy for the district 11 state senate seat.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE LOCAL NEWS
Black History Month
Join us in celebration of our rich history, heritage and culture during Black History Month.
Greater Tulsa Metropolitan Area communities will host arts & culture, music, film, panel discussions, fashion, faith and community celebrations.
FEATURED
2023, A Year In Review
Oklahomans have fared the year with their resolve intact, faith strengthened and a greater fire within. The new year will once again meet a people prepared.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE LOCAL NEWS
FEATURED
The Oklahoma Eagle Is Seeking To Build Stronger Trust With Readers
The Oklahoma Eagle, a Tulsa, Oklahoma-based media organization that has served its community for more than 100 years, is currently engaged in a significant initiative to enhance its ability to build reader trust.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE LOCAL NEWS
FEATURED
Tulsa Public Schools Promotes Ebony Johnson To Superintendent
The Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education voted to approve interim superintendent Ebony Johnson as permanent superintendent in a 4-2 vote on Dec. 11. Johnson was named to the interim superintendent position in September 2023 to replace Deborah Gist, who resigned under heavy criticism from State Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE BY JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
Post Pandemic Food Insecurity Worsens for Black Americans
An end to government pandemic relief programs has worsened food insecurity and other measures of well-being for thousands of north Tulsans and millions of other Americans. Multiple reports reveal that the fallout is more significant for Black Americans. The end of a variety of temporary relief assistance programs is plunging poor adults and children back into poverty.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE BY JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
Revivalists Envision Future For All-Black Towns
Most Oklahomans are familiar with the state’s historic All-Black towns, the significance of the independence established by their residents, the economic freedom earned and the safe haven provided throughout the country’s and state’s racially charged history.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
RELATED
TALK OF GREENWOOD
PEOPLE, NEWS AND THE PERSONAL NARRATIVES OF TULSANS WHO ARE COMMITTED TO THE BUILDING A GREATER TULSA, EVERY DAY.
Fulton Street Books & Coffee Has Moved To Greenwood, And We’re Here For It
Should anyone perceive Fulton Street Books & Coffee's recent grand opening, at 21 N. Greenwood Ave. (next to Greenwood Rising), as merely a change of location to the historic district, that would completely miss the point of the event... A blame for the head, not the heart.
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Tulsa Man Recounts Serving 31 Years In Prison After Wrongful Conviction
Lott was arrested after the lineup. He was tried and convicted and given a 100-year prison sentence. However, in 2014, the Innocence Project ordered DNA tests of the rape kit, which showed that Lott was not the rapist.
CONTRIBUTOR
Jeremy Kuzmarov
RELATED
FEATURED
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2001 Tulsa Race “Riot” (Massacre) Commission Report Update: From Rhetoric To Remedy
"While this study is long overdue, we are blessed to have eyewitnesses, our great survivors, more than 100 years later, among us... We will stare American history in the face to truthfully discuss recommendations, challenges, reparations, and policy. Right solutions lead to long-sought restorative justice." - Okla. St. Rep Regina Goodwin
CONTRIBUTOR
Ross D. Johnson
RELATED
FEATURED
Hughes Van Ellis: Survivor, Community Advocate, Eternal Optimist
As a survivor of the 1921 Race Massacre, he was making a plea that through legislation, lawmakers could bring about some justice for him and the other two survivors his 109-year-old sister Viola Fletcher and 108-year-old Lessie Benningfield Randle - that the courts had denied. Van Ellis’ speech, along with those of others who testified, was broadcast nationally from the chambers of the U.S. Congress. Listeners tuning in across the country heard – and clung to - his words.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
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New TPS Superintendent Gives Progress Report To State Board
Tulsa Public Schools is undergoing a period of regrouping. Administrators at TPS are looking for ways to raise the test scores of students, lift the classroom experience and address other challenges. It is an apt moment for the community of educators, parents, students, and concerned citizens in the North Tulsa community to turn to its most tried and true resource: teachers.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
AROUND TOWN: BLACK WALL STREET & GREATER TULSA
DISCOVER ALL OF THE GREAT FILMS, OUTDOOR EVENTS, CONCERTS, EXHIBITIONS AND FAMILY FUN THAT GREATER TULSA OFFERS.
Feb. 1
THE LINGERING LEGACIES OF URBAN RENEWAL
Urban renewal radically changed Tulsa’s landscape in the 1960’s and ’70’s in ways that many residents were deeply opposed to. Author Victor Luckerson and Greenwood photographer Don Thompson will discuss the personal and policy impacts of urban renewal, juxtaposing visuals from government sources (redlining and urban renewal maps) with Thompson’s on-the-ground photography of how Greenwood residents experienced those tumultuous years.
Jan. 26 - Feb. 04
CHOIR BOY
Choir Boy is an exploration of the intersection of race and sexuality through brilliant storytelling, music, and syncopated step dancing.
Feb. 13
AILEY II
The Next Generation of Dance - Ailey II is universally renowned for merging the spirit and energy of the country’s finest early-career dance talent with the passion and creative vision of today’s most outstanding and emerging choreographers.
Mar. 13
2024 WOMEN'S SUMMIT
2024 Women’s Summit at the Doubletree Warren Place, 6110 S. Yale Ave. The program is sponsored by the Greenwood Women’s Business Center, 102 N. Greenwood Ave., Suite 201. For more information, contact info@greenwoodwbc.com or gbcwomensummit.com.
Mar. 27
WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH – “AND SO I STAYED ”
Women’s History Month – “And So I Stayed” will be shown at Tulsa Community College at its VanTrease Performing Arts Center for Education (PACE), 103000 E. 81st St., on March 27 from 6 p.m. – 8 p.m.
FEATURED
Victims Allege Corruption In Tulsa Criminal Justice System
On July 17, Chico and 20 other protesters rallied and spoke at a rally for criminal justice reform in front of the Tulsa County Courthouse against corruption in the Tulsa judicial system and for reforms in the system.
CONTRIBUTOR
Jeremy Kuzmarov
RELATED
FEATURED
Oklahoma State Officials Vote To Accredit Tulsa Public Schools, Averting State Takeover
Tulsa, Okla. The Oklahoma State Board of Education on Thursday, Aug. 24 voted to approve the accreditation of Tulsa Public Schools. The OSBE set the accreditation status at "accredited with deficiencies."
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
TAKEOVER? What It Means For Tulsa Public Schools
Should Oklahoma officials ‘make good’ on their threats of further punitive action against TPS, and takeover the state’s largest school district in pursuit of its perceived Brave New World, Tulsa students and parents will ultimately shoulder the weight of such partisan bias.
CONTRIBUTOR
Ross D. Johnson
RELATED
FEATURED
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“A Whistle Blew About 5:00 A.M., And The Invasion Of Greenwood Began”
The survivors, descendants, and communities of Tulsa, Oklahoma that continue to struggle in the wake of the state-sanctioned, institutional and societal racism that culminated in the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, followed by more than 100 years of legislative cowardice intended to protect the interests of those who benefited from the deaths of the innocent, will find no immediate respite in the halls of Tulsa district courts, reveals by Tulsa County Judge Caroline Wall’s final ruling late Friday, Jul.7.
CONTRIBUTOR
Ross D. Johnson
RELATED
FEATURED
Will Justice Prevail For Race Massacre Survivors?
With Tulsa County District Judge Caroline Wall’s dismissal of the Race Massacre survivor’s case for reparations, the burning question is whether there is any remaining hope for justice for the victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, the most murderous, violent acts in the city’s history.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
Students of the COVID-19 Era
An ongoing series that explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on education, partially on Black, Indigenous and people of color communities in Oklahoma.
By Gary Lee, The Oklahoma Eagle.
FEATURED
Cindy McGhee: How One Woman Built A Business From Scratch
One Of Fastest Growing Companies In The Country: Building The Next Generation Of Entrepreneurs (and Homeowners)
CONTRIBUTOR
Dr. Jerry Goodwin
MORE TALK OF GREENWOOD STORIES
FEATURED
The TINA TURNER Musical Reveals Trials And Triumphs
The arc of Tina Turner’s career is well-known. Although Ike’s story is lesser known, he had a powerful influence on Tina’s life and career. They had a family together, and he witnessed Tina rise to superstardom.
Ike Turner may have had multiple sides to his personality, according to Tulsans who knew him and the actor who plays him in the musical, “Tina, The Tina Turner Musical,” coming to Tulsa next week. However, the Ike Turner the public has seen is a violent man.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Miss Juneteenth to be shown on Mother’s Day at Circle Cinema, May 12
The film features a former beauty queen turned hard working single mom as she prepares her rebellious teenage daughter for the Miss Juneteenth pageant. She hopes to keep her daughter from repeating the same mistakes in life that she made. The movie was released in 2020 during the Covid 19 pandemic.
CONTRIBUTOR
Talk of Greenwood
MORE TALK OF GREENWOOD STORIES
FEATURED
Wendell Franklin Retires As Tulsa’s Police Chief
Tulsa’s first Black police chief will retire July 31 and assume a new position leading security for the BOK Financial Corp. Chief Wendell Franklin was hired as the City of Tulsa’s 40th police chief on Feb. 1, 2020, just before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Early in Franklin’s career, he was called upon to create secure spaces for a series of high-profile events significant in the Black community, including the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter rallies, Black Panther marches, and the 2021 centennial anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Report Shows Minimal Progress For Black Tulsans
The City of Tulsa has released its annual Equality Indicators report for 2023 revealing that the needle marking progress in opportunities and well-being for disadvantaged communities has hardly moved during the last six years of reporting. The Indicators reports measure equality disparities among populations across various themes and topics, assessed using more than fifty-four metrics. The Oklahoma Eagle, as it has each year, closely examines how racial and community disparities affect North Tulsans.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
COVID Learning Losses to Cost Students Billions in Lost Income
Oklahoma Students Will Suffer Most. For the thousands of pupils in Tulsa – and across Oklahoma - who struggled with school during the COVID-19 pandemic, those challenges are destined to impact their earnings potential in the workplace. Students of the COVID-19 era will likely take home thousands of dollars less in wages annually than they would have had the pandemic not occurred, according to a new education study.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
Foundation Supports Programs For TPS Pupils
While Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) receives the majority of its funding from state tax dollars, millions of dollars in local grants and contributions boost the TPS education budget annually. Additional charitable donations also support public education in a variety of ways under the auspices of the Foundation for Tulsa Schools (FTS).
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
Their
Minutes after the Oklahoma Medical Examiner’s summary report was shared, regarging Nex Benedict’s death, by the Owasso Police Department on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter) Libs of TikTok account followers began to demand an apology from local and national media, LGBTQ advocacy groups and Oklahomans who attributed the violence and hatred experienced by Nex to their rhetoric.
CONTRIBUTOR
Ross D. Johnson
MORE ROSS D. JOHNSON STORIES
FEATURED
The Story Of Greenwood Will Survive Any Court Decision
During the 100th anniversary of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, Viola Ford Fletcher’s voice didn’t crack while seated before the U.S. House of Representatives, describing the violence of the white mob in her childhood community of Greenwood, the Tulsa, Oklahoma district, known as Black Wall Street. “I still see Black men being shot, Black bodies lying in the street. I still smell smoke and see fire,” Fletcher told the U.S. House Judiciary Subcommittee in May 19, 2021.
CONTRIBUTOR
Deon Osborne
MORE LOCAL STORIES
FEATURED
Women’s History Month Profile – Ashley Townsend teaches how to save money and create generational wealth
The Oklahoma Eagle conducted an interview with Ashley Townsend of Chase Bank. She is vice president community manager at the bank. Joining in the interview was Kim Marsh, a news and editorial contributor at the newspaper. (The interview was edited for clarity and conciseness.)
CONTRIBUTOR
Dr. Jerry Goodwin
MORE DR. JERRY GOODWIN STORIES
FEATURED
Mayoral Candidates Make Their Pitches
During a broad-ranging discussion, the candidates highlighted the following key topics: the challenges of the unhoused and the related problems of mental health; street improvement delays; bipartisanship and co-governance with Tulsa area Native American tribes; and issues with mass transit.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
Focus on The Contenders for Tulsa Mayor
The three candidates registered for the Tulsa Mayor’s race are City Councilor Jayme Fowler, Tulsa County Commissioner Karen Keith, and Monroe Nichols, former Oklahoma House Representative of the 72nd District. Other candidates may still enter the race.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH STORIES
FEATURED
National Association of Black Journalists Regional Conference To Take Place In Tulsa, April 12-13
The National Association of Black Journalists Region III will host its annual conference in Tulsa, April 12-13. This theme of the event is “Press and Prosperity: NABJ Meets Black Wall Street.”
CONTRIBUTOR
Dr. Jerry Goodwin
MORE GARY LEE STORIES
FEATURED
Jennettie Marshall: Guiding Tulsa Schools Through Troubled Waters
Elected to the Tulsa School Board in 2016, Marshall is the longest serving member of the board - a panel of seven elected officials charged with overseeing the running of all 77 Tulsa Public Schools. She makes it her business to push for high standards in education and facilities for the schools in her district, which is composed of more than a dozen schools, including several institutions that have been vital for northsiders - McLain, Central High School, Burroughs, and Hawthorne Elementary among others. But Marshall’s dominion on the board is not limited to North Tulsa. She is the self-styled watchman for all TPS schools.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
MORE GARY LEE STORIES
FEATURED
A Brief Primer On Tulsa School Board Elections
School board elections nationwide have taken on more importance than ever as local school boards grapple with several pressing issues. First, the hot topics are student learning losses resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, a chronic shortage of teachers, and ideological issues which in earlier eras were not prominent in non-partisan school board elections and decision making.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
Tulsa Public Schools Reckoning Imminent
Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent Ebony Johnson is pulling out all the stops to improve the academic achievement scores of Tulsa students in the state testing that is scheduled to take place in April. In February, the Oklahoma State Board of Education formally adopted new rules setting minimum standards for student test performance. The board’s apparent objective is to sanction the TPS school district if it fails.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL STORIES
FEATURED
After the closing of Juno Medical-Tulsa, what’s the state of health care for North Tulsa?
In a posting on Meta (also known as Facebook), the social media platform, Dr. Jabraan Pasha, Juno Tulsa’s executive director, said, “The information we were given was Juno Headquarters lost support from a major national investor, which significantly impacted the company’s financials. As a result, he added, the company was suddenly closing its two newest clinics in Atlanta and Tulsa.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
MORE GARY LEE STORIES
FEATURED
Women’s Business Summit Celebrates Successes
When the Greenwood Women’s Business Center opened two years ago, it promised to provide women in Tulsa – particularly Black women and other women of color – a hand in launching and growing their businesses.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE STORIES
FEATURED
KanDee Washington, TPS District 2 Candidate
The Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) District Two school board seat is considered a “revolving door” by residents in the area. Candidate KanDee Washington, campaigning for the seat, wants to create more stability in the district’s representation.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE STORIES
FEATURED
Ernie Fields Jr. Passes: Noted musician and producer in Hollywood
Critically acclaimed musician and multi-instrumentalist Ernie Fields Jr. passed away at his home in Pasadena, Calif., on March 8. He was 89 years old.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE STORIES
FEATURED
School Board Candidates Are Seeking Your Vote
Four candidates competing in the upcoming Tulsa School Board elections used a Feb. 27 public forum at the University of Tulsa to make a case for you to vote for them.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
MORE KIMBERLY MARSH
FEATURED
Following The Passing Of Nex Benedict, Serious Questions Linger
Owasso, Okla. – On the morning of Feb. 26, a group of gender equality advocates and supporters gathered on a busy intersection in this Tulsa suburb, in the shadow of Owasso High School, where two weeks earlier, three students bullied and beat Nex Benedict, a 16-year-old sophomore at the school who identified as non-binary.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
MORE JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
The Fate Of Oklahoma Race-based Law May Be Decided Soon
‘UNQUALIFIED’ JUDGE TO Make Ruling
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
State School Superintendent: No Teacher Pay Increases
Oklahoma Teacher Shortage Continues
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
Tulsa Public Schools To Expand Student Free Meals Program
Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) will expand its free meals program to include all students in district schools beginning in the 2024-’25 school year. Free breakfast and lunch are already automatically provided to all elementary school students in the district.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
Goodwin Launches Campaign For State Senate Seat
State Rep. Regina Goodwin, District 73, stood before a jubilant crowd on Saturday, Jan. 6, flanked by campaign signs that will soon occupy the landscape of state senate district communities. The scene was the two-term representative’s announcement of her candidacy for the district 11 state senate seat.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE LOCAL NEWS
FEATURED
2023, A Year In Review
Oklahomans have fared the year with their resolve intact, faith strengthened and a greater fire within. The new year will once again meet a people prepared.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE LOCAL NEWS
FEATURED
The Oklahoma Eagle Is Seeking To Build Stronger Trust With Readers
The Oklahoma Eagle, a Tulsa, Oklahoma-based media organization that has served its community for more than 100 years, is currently engaged in a significant initiative to enhance its ability to build reader trust.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle
MORE LOCAL NEWS
FEATURED
Tulsa Public Schools Promotes Ebony Johnson To Superintendent
The Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education voted to approve interim superintendent Ebony Johnson as permanent superintendent in a 4-2 vote on Dec. 11. Johnson was named to the interim superintendent position in September 2023 to replace Deborah Gist, who resigned under heavy criticism from State Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE BY JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
Post Pandemic Food Insecurity Worsens for Black Americans
An end to government pandemic relief programs has worsened food insecurity and other measures of well-being for thousands of north Tulsans and millions of other Americans. Multiple reports reveal that the fallout is more significant for Black Americans. The end of a variety of temporary relief assistance programs is plunging poor adults and children back into poverty.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
MORE BY JOHN NEAL
FEATURED
Revivalists Envision Future For All-Black Towns
Most Oklahomans are familiar with the state’s historic All-Black towns, the significance of the independence established by their residents, the economic freedom earned and the safe haven provided throughout the country’s and state’s racially charged history.
CONTRIBUTOR
Kimberly Marsh
RELATED
FEATURED
Tulsa Man Recounts Serving 31 Years In Prison After Wrongful Conviction
Perry Lott was arrested after the lineup. He was tried and convicted and given a 100-year prison sentence. However, in 2014, the Innocence Project ordered DNA tests of the rape kit, which showed that Lott was not the rapist.
CONTRIBUTOR
Jeremy Kuzmarov
RELATED
TALK OF GREENWOOD
PEOPLE, NEWS AND THE PERSONAL NARRATIVES OF TULSANS WHO ARE COMMITTED TO THE BUILDING A GREATER TULSA, EVERY DAY.
Fulton Street Books & Coffee Has Moved To Greenwood, And We’re Here For It
Should anyone perceive Fulton Street Books & Coffee's recent grand opening, at 21 N. Greenwood Ave. (next to Greenwood Rising), as merely a change of location to the historic district, that would completely miss the point of the event... A blame for the head, not the heart.
918 SERIES
A BRIEF Q&A WITH TULSANS WHO SHARE THEIR PASSIONS AND INVEST IN OUR COMMUNITIES.
918: ABA N. HAMMOND, OUTGOING CHAIR, TULSA'S YOUNG PROFESSIONALS
Aba N. Hammond, the outgoing chair of Tulsa's Young Professionals (TYPROS). Hammond, 30, a business strategist and consultant by profession, is the first Black to serve in TYPROS's chair role.
FEATURED
2001 Tulsa Race “Riot” (Massacre) Commission Report Update: From Rhetoric To Remedy
"While this study is long overdue, we are blessed to have eyewitnesses, our great survivors, more than 100 years later, among us... We will stare American history in the face to truthfully discuss recommendations, challenges, reparations, and policy. Right solutions lead to long-sought restorative justice." - Okla. St. Rep Regina Goodwin
CONTRIBUTOR
Ross D. Johnson
RELATED
FEATURED
Hughes Van Ellis: Survivor, Community Advocate, Eternal Optimist
As a survivor of the 1921 Race Massacre, he was making a plea that through legislation, lawmakers could bring about some justice for him and the other two survivors his 109-year-old sister Viola Fletcher and 108-year-old Lessie Benningfield Randle - that the courts had denied. Van Ellis’ speech, along with those of others who testified, was broadcast nationally from the chambers of the U.S. Congress. Listeners tuning in across the country heard – and clung to - his words.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
A Conversation With Traci Manuel, Oklahoma Teacher of The Year
Tulsa Public Schools is undergoing a period of regrouping. Administrators at TPS are looking for ways to raise the test scores of students, lift the classroom experience and address other challenges. It is an apt moment for the community of educators, parents, students, and concerned citizens in the North Tulsa community to turn to its most tried and true resource: teachers.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
New TPS Superintendent Gives Progress Report To State Board
Newly appointed interim Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) Superintendent Dr. Ebony Johnson used a Sept. 28 meeting to address the conditional expectations the Oklahoma State Board of Education (OSBE) placed on TPS.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
RELATED
FEATURED
Victims Allege Corruption In Tulsa Criminal Justice System
On July 17, Chico and 20 other protesters rallied and spoke at a rally for criminal justice reform in front of the Tulsa County Courthouse against corruption in the Tulsa judicial system and for reforms in the system.
CONTRIBUTOR
Jeremy Kuzmarov
RELATED
FEATURED
“A Whistle Blew About 5:00 A.M., And The Invasion Of Greenwood Began”
The survivors, descendants, and communities of Tulsa, Oklahoma that continue to struggle in the wake of the state-sanctioned, institutional and societal racism that culminated in the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, followed by more than 100 years of legislative cowardice intended to protect the interests of those who benefited from the deaths of the innocent, will find no immediate respite in the halls of Tulsa district courts, reveals by Tulsa County Judge Caroline Wall’s final ruling late Friday, Jul.7.
CONTRIBUTOR
Ross D. Johnson
RELATED
FEATURED
Will Justice Prevail For Race Massacre Survivors?
With Tulsa County District Judge Caroline Wall’s dismissal of the Race Massacre survivor’s case for reparations, the burning question is whether there is any remaining hope for justice for the victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, the most murderous, violent acts in the city’s history.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
The Eagle Receives Top Awards In Annual Oklahoma Press Association Competition
SHAWNEE – The Oklahoma Eagle – the state’s oldest Black-owned newspaper that rose from the ashes of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre – won a record number of top journalism honors in the Oklahoma Press Association’s Better Newspaper Contest Awards.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle Staff
RELATED
FEATURED
The Oklahoma Eagle Wins Best Page Design Award In Great Plains Journalism Contest
TULSA – The Oklahoma Eagle, the state’s oldest Black-owned media company and the last privately-owned business that owns property and continues to operate in Tulsa’s famed Historic Greenwood District, won Best Page Design in the Great Plains Journalism Awards competition on May 5.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle Staff
RELATED
FEATURED
Tulsans Remember Tina Turner, A Down-To-Earth Rock Star
In February of 1968, The Ike and Tina Turner Revue came to Tulsa to entertain the home crowd. Even back then, fans recall, at all of 29, Tina showed up at the North Tulsa-based Big Ten Ballroom with her self-styled diva glamour.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
The Oklahoma Eagle Wins Best Page Design Award In Great Plains Journalism Contest
TULSA – The Oklahoma Eagle, the state’s oldest Black-owned media company and the last privately-owned business that owns property and continues to operate in Tulsa’s famed Historic Greenwood District, won Best Page Design in the Great Plains Journalism Awards competition on May 5.
CONTRIBUTOR
The Oklahoma Eagle Staff
RELATED
FEATURED
FEATURED
Students of the COVID-19 Era: How the Pandemic followed them to Langston University, Oklahoma’s only HBCU
TULSA – The coronavirus pandemic may be waning across much of the globe. However, for many students at Langston University – the only Oklahoma historically Black college and university – the aftereffects still impact their lives at its campuses in Langston, Tulsa and Oklahoma City.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
Oklahoma GOP-led Measure Providing Public Funding For Private Education Becomes Law
Oklahoma Students Will Suffer Most. For the thousands of pupils in Tulsa – and across Oklahoma – who struggled with school during the COVID-19 pandemic, those challenges are destined to impact their earnings potential in the workplace. Students of the COVID-19 era will likely take home thousands of dollars less in wages annually than they would have had the pandemic not occurred, according to a new education study.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
RELATED
FEATURED
A Book That Finally Tells Greenwood’s Epic Story
“Before its burning, Greenwood Avenue had been lined with hotels, restaurants, furriers, and even an early taxi service using a Ford Model T,” Luckerson wrote in The Ringer. “Nearly 200 businesses populated the 35-square-block district in all, as did some homes as stately as the ones owned by upper-class whites in the city.”
CONTRIBUTOR
M. David Goodwin
MORE GARY LEE STORIES
FEATURED
Two Tulsa Educators Who Overcame The Pandemic’s Challenges
The impact of the COVID-19 virus was brutal for Tulsa Public Schools’ teachers. The same woes that burdened educators across the country – and indeed globally – affected them, too: school administrators who were ambivalent about how to respond to the pandemic; off-and-on decisions about whether schools would be remote or in-person; coping with COVID-19 illnesses themselves or among colleagues; having to learn the tools of remote teaching on the spot.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
Alisa Bell, J.A.M.E.S.: A Champion For Young Mothers
Since it was founded in 2007, J.A.M.E.S., Inc. has helped hundreds of young Tulsa mothers, Bell estimates. Around 70 percent are young Black Tulsans, while the others are white, Native American or Latina.
PHOTOS
Ross D. Johnson, The Oklahoma Eagle
RELATED
FEATURED
FEATURED
FEATURED
Oklahoma GOP-led Measure Providing Public Funding For Private Education Becomes Law
The new legislation will likely weaken Tulsa Public Schools and other public school systems across the state by diverting millions of dollars from them. It may also disadvantage families in economically disadvantaged communities, many of whom cannot afford private schools, several educators and lawmakers have said.
CONTRIBUTOR
John Neal
RELATED
FEATURED
Students of the COVID-19 Era: How the Pandemic followed them to Langston University, Oklahoma’s only HBCU
TULSA – The coronavirus pandemic may be waning across much of the globe. However, for many students at Langston University – the only Oklahoma historically Black college and university – the aftereffects still impact their lives at its campuses in Langston, Tulsa and Oklahoma City.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
A Book That Finally Tells Greenwood’s Epic Story
“Before its burning, Greenwood Avenue had been lined with hotels, restaurants, furriers, and even an early taxi service using a Ford Model T,” Luckerson wrote in The Ringer. “Nearly 200 businesses populated the 35-square-block district in all, as did some homes as stately as the ones owned by upper-class whites in the city.”
CONTRIBUTOR
M. David Goodwin
RELATED
FEATURED
In The Era Of COVID-19, Tulsa Public Schools Lost A Generation Of Black And Brown Students
The Oklahoma Eagle is investigating how the coronavirus pandemic impacted the education of the Black and Brown children in Tulsa Public Schools. In the first installment of our three-part series, we detail the impact the pandemic has had on the disadvantaged schools in our community.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FEATURED
Doubts Rise Over A Resolution To Tulsa Race Massacre Mass Graves
Is the city of Tulsa serious in its mission to uncover the mystery of bodies still missing from the 1921 Race Massacre?
PHOTO
The Oklahoma Eagle
RELATED
FEATURED
Remote Learning Delivers Mixed Success for Tulsa Area Students in the Era Of COVID-19
The Oklahoma Eagle has conducted a probe into how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the nearly 33,000 students in Tulsa Public Schools and the surrounding metropolitan area school districts.
CONTRIBUTOR
Gary Lee
RELATED
FWD: People First
“Nearly 2 million people are incarcerated in U.S. jails & prisons. Too often, they are described as “offender” & “felon”. These labels bias the public against criminal justice reform and make more freedom less possible.“
Word choices matter. Put #peoplefirst.
EDUCATION
WE PURSUE THE FULL AND CLEAR TRUTHS ABOUT THE STATE OF EDUCATION IN GREATER TULSA AND OKLAHOMA, FROM K-12 TO OUR HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS.
ARTS & CULTURE
THE HISTORIC GREENWOOD DISTRICT AND GREATER TULSA HAVE A VIBRANT AND RICH ARTS COMMUNITY, WORTHY OF DISCOVERY AND CELEBRATION.
EDUCATION
WE PURSUE THE FULL AND CLEAR TRUTHS ABOUT THE STATE OF EDUCATION IN GREATER TULSA AND OKLAHOMA, FROM K-12 TO OUR HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS.
Republican governors Ron DeSantis of Florida and Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma and their respective GOP-majority legislatures have moved aggressively to ban the teaching of Critical Race Theory in the education system in their states.
ARTS & CULTURE
THE HISTORIC GREENWOOD DISTRICT AND GREATER TULSA HAVE A VIBRANT AND RICH ARTS COMMUNITY, WORTHY OF DISCOVERY AND CELEBRATION.
HADESTOWN: A CLASSIC PRODUCTION WITH CONTEMPORARY THEMES
“It is about hope and love, and will love win? Will love carry you through?”
Explore
“The narratives and voices of the African American community are worthy of being amplified while aligned with our highest virtue, truth.“
We actively build and nurture a culture that is committed to an unwavering exploration of truth and what it reveals.
Explore
“The narratives and voices of the African American community are worthy of being amplified while aligned with our highest virtue, truth.“
We actively build and nurture a culture that is committed to an unwavering exploration of truth and what it reveals.
LOCAL
CAN BUTTIGIEG'S $1B PLAN HELP TULSA
The U.S. Transportation Secretary hopes to deliver on Pres. Joe Biden’s pledge to reconnect Black communities across America.
Of Greenwood: Liberty Mutual Insurance Series
The Oklahoma Eagle’s “Of Greenwood” series is part of our 2nd Century Campaign, which commemorates the hundredth anniversary of this African American newspaper. “Of Greenwood,” is a monthly series examines key legacies that helped to shape our community as the “Black Wall Street of America.” Our series receives support from Liberty Mutual Insurance.
STORIES
Publish
“What will provide the most appealing, engaging and memorable experience for our readers, while aligning with our values?”
We ask ourselves this question prior to publishing every article, post, advertisement, branded/sponsored content, editorial and op-ed… And our responses must meet the established standards.