
Luisa Clausen
Luisa Clausen was KOSU's news intern, serving in fall 2024 and spring 2025.
Clausen was born and raised in Curitiba, Brazil. She taught herself English at 13, and first came to the United States as an exchange student in 2019.
She found a second home in Oklahoma and decided to leave Brazil in 2021 to start college at Oklahoma State University, where she majored in multimedia journalism.
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A News 9 helicopter was damaged while attempting to land at Wiley Post Airport Wednesday evening, according to preliminary information from the Federal Aviation Administration.
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Dr. Jim Hess officially took the helm as Oklahoma State University’s 20th president Tuesday, promising to guide the institution through financial headwinds with a steady focus on students.
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A passenger rail route connecting Fort Worth and Oklahoma City could lose its daily service by June after Texas lawmakers stripped funding for the Heartland Flyer from the state’s upcoming budget.
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Airline passengers will need a Real ID to board domestic flights starting May 7.
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Construction is underway Monday on Tulsa’s I-44 and U.S. 75 interchange, known locally as "Traffic Henge" or "Tulsa Stonehenge," as crews begin a $252 million project to complete the long-delayed plan.
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Former state senator Mike Mazzei launched his campaign for Oklahoma’s 2026 gubernatorial election Thursday, pledging to overhaul education, cut taxes and protect Oklahoma land from foreign ownership.
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Voters in 71 Oklahoma counties went to the polls Tuesday to consider a wide array of issues and candidates.
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State Superintendent Ryan Walters and the Oklahoma State Department of Education have filed a federal lawsuit against the Freedom From Religion Foundation, escalating a long-standing conflict over religion in public schools.
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Veronica Munoz walks into Stillwater Animal Welfare and greets each dog like an old friend. Munoz, a stay-at-home mom, began volunteering at the city shelter two years ago. What started as a hobby quickly turned into a mission.
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After one month in office, Oklahoma State University Interim President Jim Hess announced a series of “organizational changes” following a state audit that found $41 million in misappropriated funds at OSU’s Innovation Foundation.