The Education Department cancels bids for classroom bibles. (Oklahoma Watch)
State Board of Education hires outside attorney. (Tulsa World)
Stitt and Walters defend a Catholic charter school before the U.S. high court. (KOSU)
Oklahoma woman charged in Capitol Riot hopes for Trump pardon. (NewsOK)
Concerns are rising over mass deportations. (KOSU)
FBI investigate racist texts sent to Black students. (NewsOK)
Five Oklahomans are already raising money for the 2026 governor’s race. (NewsOK)
Tulsa County Election Board certifies results without trouble. (Tulsa World)
Oklahoma lawmakers are gearing up for the next session. (NewsOK)
A state senator wants to get rid of straight party voting. (Oklahoma Voice)
Oklahoma Turnpike Authority plans to go completely cashless by the end of the month. (KOSU)
OKC and Tulsa deal with housing issues. (Oklahoma Watch)
Moody’s confirms Oklahoma County’s “very strong” credit rating. (NewsOK)
Tulsa seeks bids for a downtown convention hotel. (Tulsa World)
OKC’s transit, EMBARK, hosts a free health fair. (KOSU)
The Quapaw Nation wants more to clean up the Picher superfund site. (Tulsa World)
Tulsa hands over ownership of Council Oak Park to Muskogee Nation. (Tulsa World)
Agriculture workers and groups gather to help Tallgrass bison. (Tulsa World)
A national civil rights attorney plans to speak at a John Hope Franklin event. (Tulsa World)
Israeli music festival survivor speaks in Tulsa. (Tulsa World)
Choctaw elder gets honors for service in WWII. (KOSU)
Today’s Veterans’ Day Parade in Tulsa honors the late Senator Inhofe. (Tulsa World)
Tulsa filmmaker’s documentary airs tonight on PBS. (Tulsa World)
The Cherokee nation teams with Amazon to dub “Rings of Power”. (NewsOK)
Oklahomans make an appearance in Grammy nominations. (KOSU)
Oklahoma’s top prosecutor says state can regulate Slap Fighting. (KOSU)
Thunder loses the second game of its new season. (NewsOK)