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On March 3 Darla K. (Rawls) Rogers joined her Mom and Dad in the arms of our Heavenly Father and Savior. Darla was born to Ray and Lena Rawls on Septem - ber 15, 1948.
Read moreOver $185,000 collected by a former employee went missing between December 2016 and November 2022.
Read moreNew studies from the world’s leading research institutions show that Christians who actively practice their faith are more hopeful, less likely to become unhappy during times of global crisis and isolation, and more likely to lend a hand to fellow citizens.
Read moreI am so fortunate to work at a school where I am allowed to completely be myself and share with students and staff in ways that I’ve never had the opportunity to do share before.
Read moreSympathy is extended to the Bruton family on the loss of Edith Mae Harjo Price, daughter of Leona Harjo Coulter, granddaughter Minnie Bruton. There will be a memorial service on April 27th at 1:00 p.m. at Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, 2330 N. Quaker Ave, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Please remember Elayne Evans, Majorie Plunkett, Jerry French as they continue their treatments. Continued prayer request for those on our sick list, Otis Davis, Taft Forshee, Tiger French, Wilbert Zackery, Lloyd Samilton, Yolanda Jackson, Becki Stripling, Christopher Stripling, L.C. and Irene Carson, and Earnest Hamilton.
Read moreEleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site Eleanor Roosevelt voting in 1936, less than twenty years after the Nineteenth Amendment guaranteed women the right to vote. FDR Library Photo Looking back on her political development, Eleanor Roosevelt wrote that she had her "first contact with the suffrage movement rather late." In fact, she did not consider herself a suffragists until 1911, when her husband Franklin D. Roosevelt, then a state assemblyman in New York, came out for women's right to vote. “I realized that if my husband were a suffragist I probably must be, too." It was only in the 1920s that Eleanor Roosevelt became fully involved in the women’s rights movement.
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