NEWS FEED

Divorces ASKED

1 hour ago

Marriages (Tulsans unless indicated)

1 hour ago

Gunman in Navy Yard rampage was hearing voices He had been treated since August by Veterans Affairs, the officials said.

17 hours ago

Corrections, clarifications

By Staff Reports on Sep 17, 2013, at 4:39 AM  



Local

Power outage leaves 3,500 customers without service

An AEP-PSO spokesperson said a transformer failure at the Dawson substation about 3:40 a.m. Wednesday that caused a feeder line to malfunction

Tulsa Club owner Josh Barrett vows to remake historic building

The Tulsa Club building was completed on Dec. 26, 1927, as a joint venture between the Tulsa Club and the Tulsa Chamber of Commerce.
Click here to view a slideshow of the inside of the Tulsa Club.
Click here to read John Clanton's blog about the building.

  • A Sunday Tulsa World Sports cutline incorrectly listed John Admire’s rank. Admire is a retired major general.
  • A Monday Tulsa World story incorrectly included administrative costs in the amount of annual reimbursements spent to send special-needs students to private schools. The state spent $1.3 million in public education funds to send 220 children to private schools in 2012-13 and $936,000 to send 148 children to private schools in 2011-12.

Local

Power outage leaves 3,500 customers without service

An AEP-PSO spokesperson said a transformer failure at the Dawson substation about 3:40 a.m. Wednesday that caused a feeder line to malfunction

Tulsa Club owner Josh Barrett vows to remake historic building

The Tulsa Club building was completed on Dec. 26, 1927, as a joint venture between the Tulsa Club and the Tulsa Chamber of Commerce.
Click here to view a slideshow of the inside of the Tulsa Club.
Click here to read John Clanton's blog about the building.

COMMENTS

Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories. You can either sign in to your Tulsa World account or use Facebook.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free. To comment through Facebook, please sign in to your account before you comment.

Read our commenting policy.


Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free.

Read our commenting policy.

By clicking "Submit" you are agreeing to our terms and conditions, and grant Tulsa World the right and license to publish the content of your posted comment, in whole or in part, in Tulsa World.