 Oklahoma Station Chapter of Safari Club International slates … The organization also has helped fund the purchase of an airboat used by the Wildlife Department on waterfowl surveys and other wetland management tasks, and several trailers for use in the Department’s Shotgun Training Education … read more…
Outdoor calendar « KGYN Radio News 25: The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, Oklahoma State University – Dept of Natural Resources Ecology and Management, and the Nature Conservancy are holding a prescribed burn field day at the J.T. Nickel Preserve north of Tahlequah … 27: The Langston University Aquaculture Program will offer workshops for ornamental fish pond hobbyists, professionals, and commercial aquaculturists in the Research, Education and Extension Complex located on the main campus. … read more…
Results tagged “Oklahoma Healthcare Authority” from KRMG Local … Results tagged “Oklahoma Healthcare Authority” from KRMG Local News KRMG (blog) The bills include supplemental appropriations to the Departments of Corrections, Public Safety, Education and the Oklahoma Healthcare Authority. … read more…
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International Academy of Hair Design Opens New Cosmetology School in Metro Center Phoenix, AZ - International Academy of Hair Design is growing. The cosmetology school is opening its fourth location in the Valley Metro Center Mall at 9617 N. Metro Parkway West, Space 2112 in Phoeni… read more…
Where To Donate Cell Phones Did you know that you can donate cell phones instead of cash to your favorite charity or non-profit?
Yes, that old or used cell phone that you’ve kept hidden in your drawer all this time is still… read more…
From Pets to People Stuart Wolman switched from pets to people when he was recently hired as Vice President of Sales and Services for hair care manufacturer Peter Hantz Company, 1840 E. University in Tempe, AZ.
Bef… read more…
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Foundation critical of Oklahoma City schools (The Oklahoman) The Oklahoma City Public School Foundation released a report today critical of district’s progress on academic goals outlined with the MAPS for Kids initiative.In 2001, when voters approved the $700 million sales tax to upgrade for Oklahoma City school buildings, a task force also posed several tenets to guide reform in the city’s education system. According to the report, after nine years, the … read more…
Foundation critical of Oklahoma City schools (The Oklahoman) The Oklahoma City Public School Foundation released a report today critical of district’s progress on academic goals outlined with the MAPS for Kids initiative.In 2001, when voters approved the $700 million sales tax to upgrade for Oklahoma City school buildings, a task force also posed several tenants to guide reform in the city’s education system. According to the report, after nine years, the … read more…
Cox Business Links Remote Broadcast Sites for Unique Oklahoma Tourism Show (redOrbit) OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb. read more…
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Resolved Question: Prominent democrats believe republicans are racist against black people, are they right?
Republicans ended slavery and had the majority votes of civil rights because they are racist?
And so does that mean all of these african americans are racist against african americans?
* Martin Luther King Jr.
* Ken Blackwell, former Secretary of State of Ohio, former Ohio gubernatorial candidate
* Keith Butler, minister, former Detroit councilman, former candidate for U.S. Senate from Michigan
* Alveda King, niece of Dr. Martin Luther King, senior fellow at the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution
* Rod Paige, former Secretary of Education
* Colin Powell, former United States Secretary of State
* Michael Powell, former FCC chairman
* Condoleezza Rice, United States Secretary of State, former National Security Advisor
* Winsome Sears, former member of Virginia House of Delegates, former candidate for U.S. House
* Michael S. Steele, former Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, former candidate for U.S. Senate from Maryland
* Thomas Stith, town councilman of Durham, NC, former candidate for Lt. Gov. of NC
* J.C. Watts, former U.S. Representative from Oklahoma
* Wallace Jefferson, chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court
* Janice Rogers Brown, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
* Clarence Thomas, associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, former Equal Employment Opportunity Commission chairman
* Larry Elder, author of 10 Things You Can’t Say in America, radio show host
* Alan Keyes, radio host, U.N. Ambassador, presidential candidate, author
* Angela McGlowan, Republican political analyst for Fox News Network who has been nicknamed the “Black Ann Coulter”
* Jesse Lee Peterson, president of The Brotherhood Organization, television and radio host
* Armstrong Williams, author of Beyond Blame, TV host of On Point
* Erik Rush, columnist, author
* La Shawn Barber, columnist, blogger
* Loo Oates, social commentator, columnist, blogger
* Stephen L. Carter, Christianity Today columnist, author of The Culture of Disbelief
* Ken Hamblin, Denver Post columnist
* Deroy Murdock, National Review columnist
* Star Parker, president of the Coalition on Urban Renewal and Education, columnist, author
* Thomas Sowell, Hoover Institute fellow, economist, author of Basic Economics
* Walter E. Williams, economist, columnist, author of More Liberty Means Less Government
* Sophia A. Nelson, columnist, blogger, commentator, GOP political strategist, Chairman of PoliticalIntersection.com
* Lionel Hampton, musician and bandleader
* Yaphet Kotto, actor
* Karl Malone, basketball player, two-time Olympic gold medalist
* Joseph C. Phillips, actor, commentator
* Lynn Swann, football player, Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate
* Jimmie Walker, actor, comedian
* Akindele Akinyemi,CEO of One Network and conservative educator
* Calvin Butts, anti-gangsta rap activist
* Herman Cain, President of Godfather’s Pizza
* Ward Connerly, University of California regent, activist and businessman
* Ezola Foster, president of Americans for Family Values, author of What’s Right For All Americans
* Samuel B. Fuller, 20th century entrepreneur
* Robert A. George, journalist, pundit and blogger.
* Niger Innis, director of Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
* Roy Innis, Hudson Institute fellow, chairman of the Congress of Racial Equality
* T.D Jakes, televangelist
* Don King, boxing promoter
* Michael King, National Advisory Board Member of Project 21, former radio talk show host
* John McWhorter, author of Losing the Race and Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute
* James Meredith, former civil rights activist
* Eric Motley, former State Department official, now vice-president of the Aspen Institute
* Deroy Murdock, Wall Street Journal opinion contributor, Cato Institute Scholar
* Gerald A. Reynolds, president of the Center for New Black Leadership, member of Project 21
* Vernon Robinson, Air Force intelligence officer, business professor
* George Schuyler, journalist, novelist
* Shelby Steele, Hoover Institute fellow, author of The Content of Our Character
* Stanley Crouch, author of In Defence of Taboos
* Lee Walker, president of the New Coalition for Economic and Social Change, Heartland Institute
Oscar J. Dunn first black Lieutenant Governor in Louisiana 1868
P.B.S Pinchback and James J. Harris become the first African-American delegates to the Republican National Convention, held in Chicago
1870 Hiram R. Revels is elected to fill U.S. Senate seat formerly held by Jefferson Davis
Joseph H. Rainey, South Carolina, becomes the first African-American Congressman
Alonzo J. Ransier is elected Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina before being elected to the U.S. Congress in ‘72
1871 Robert B. Elliot chairs South Carolina delegation to the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia
1875 Blanche K. Bruce of Mississippi becomes the first African-American elected to a full term in US Senate
Booker T. Washington
J. Ernest Wilkins as Assistant Secretary of
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Open Question: Where is your state on the list? How did your state Vote? What is it telling us America?
A company called Morgan Quitno has developed the Smartest State Award. States were ranked based on these 21 educational factors:
1. Public Elementary and Secondary School Revenue per $1,000 personal Income
2. Percent of Public Elementary and Secondary School Current Expenditures used for Instruction
3. Percent of Population Graduated from High School
4. Averaged Freshman Graduation Rate for Public High Schools
5. Percent of Public School 4th Graders Proficient or Better in Reading
6. Percent of Public School 8th Graders Proficient or Better in Reading
7. Percent of Public School 4th Graders Proficient or Better in Writing
8. Percent of Public School 8th Graders Proficient or Better in Writing
9. Percent of Public School 4th Graders Proficient or Better in Math
10. Percent of Public School 8th Graders Proficient or Better in Math
11. Average Teacher Salary as a Percent of Average Annual Pay of All Workers
12. Average Daily Attendance as a Percent of Fall Enrollment in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools
13. Percent of School-Age Population in Public Schools
14. High School Drop Out Rate
15. Special Education Pupil-Teacher Ratio
16. Percent of Public Elementary and Secondary School Staff Who are School District Administrators
17. Average Class Size in Public Elementary Schools
18. Average Class Size in Public Secondary Schools
19. Median Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Public Primary Schools
20. Median Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Public Middle Schools
21. Median Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Public High Schools
1. MASSACHUSETTS.104.3
2. NEW HAMPSHIRE.104.2
3. NORTH DAKOTA.103.8
4. VERMONT.103.8
5. MINNESOTA.103.7
6. MONTANA.103.4
7. MAINE.103.4
8. IOWA.103.2
9. CONNECTICUT.103.1
10. WISCONSIN.102.9
11. KANSAS.102.8
12. SOUTH DAKOTA.102.8
13. NEW JERSEY.102.8
14. WYOMING.102.4
15. NEBRASKA.102.3
16. WASHINGTON.101.9
17. VIRGINIA.101.9
18. OHIO.101.8
19. INDIANA.101.7
20. COLORADO.101.6
21. PENNSYLVANIA.101.5
22. IDAHO.101.4
23. OREGON..101.2
24. UTAH.101.1
25. MISSOURI.101.0
26. NEW YORK.100.7
27. MICHIGAN.100.5
28. DELAWARE.100.4
29. NORTH CAROLINA.100.2
30. TEXAS.100.0
31. ILLINOIS.99.9
32. MARYLAND.99.7
33. RHODE ISLAND.99.5
34. KENTUCKY.99.4
35. OKLAHOMA.99.3
36. ALASKA.99.0
37. WEST VIRGINIA.98.7
38. SOUTH CAROLINA.98.4
39. FLORIDA.98.4
40. GEORGIA.98.0
41. TENNESSEE.97.7
42. ARKANSAS.97.5
43. ARIZONA.97.4
44. NEVADA.96.5
45. ALABAMA.95.7
46. NEW MEXICO.95.7
47. HAWAII.95.6
48. CALIFORNIA.95.5
49. LOUISIANA.95.3
50. MISSISSIPPI.94.2
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Open Question: Are Blue states really smarter?
By IQ it appears as if those libtards are smarter? Check your state.
A company called Morgan Quitno has developed the Smartest State Award. States were ranked based on these 21 educational factors:
1. Public Elementary and Secondary School Revenue per $1,000 personal Income
2. Percent of Public Elementary and Secondary School Current Expenditures used for Instruction
3. Percent of Population Graduated from High School
4. Averaged Freshman Graduation Rate for Public High Schools
5. Percent of Public School 4th Graders Proficient or Better in Reading
6. Percent of Public School 8th Graders Proficient or Better in Reading
7. Percent of Public School 4th Graders Proficient or Better in Writing
8. Percent of Public School 8th Graders Proficient or Better in Writing
9. Percent of Public School 4th Graders Proficient or Better in Math
10. Percent of Public School 8th Graders Proficient or Better in Math
11. Average Teacher Salary as a Percent of Average Annual Pay of All Workers
12. Average Daily Attendance as a Percent of Fall Enrollment in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools
13. Percent of School-Age Population in Public Schools
14. High School Drop Out Rate
15. Special Education Pupil-Teacher Ratio
16. Percent of Public Elementary and Secondary School Staff Who are School District Administrators
17. Average Class Size in Public Elementary Schools
18. Average Class Size in Public Secondary Schools
19. Median Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Public Primary Schools
20. Median Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Public Middle Schools
21. Median Pupil-Teacher Ratio in Public High Schools
1. MASSACHUSETTS.104.3
2. NEW HAMPSHIRE.104.2
3. NORTH DAKOTA.103.8
4. VERMONT.103.8
5. MINNESOTA.103.7
6. MONTANA.103.4
7. MAINE.103.4
8. IOWA.103.2
9. CONNECTICUT.103.1
10. WISCONSIN.102.9
11. KANSAS.102.8
12. SOUTH DAKOTA.102.8
13. NEW JERSEY.102.8
14. WYOMING.102.4
15. NEBRASKA.102.3
16. WASHINGTON.101.9
17. VIRGINIA.101.9
18. OHIO.101.8
19. INDIANA.101.7
20. COLORADO.101.6
21. PENNSYLVANIA.101.5
22. IDAHO.101.4
23. OREGON..101.2
24. UTAH.101.1
25. MISSOURI.101.0
26. NEW YORK.100.7
27. MICHIGAN.100.5
28. DELAWARE.100.4
29. NORTH CAROLINA.100.2
30. TEXAS.100.0
31. ILLINOIS.99.9
32. MARYLAND.99.7
33. RHODE ISLAND.99.5
34. KENTUCKY.99.4
35. OKLAHOMA.99.3
36. ALASKA.99.0
37. WEST VIRGINIA.98.7
38. SOUTH CAROLINA.98.4
39. FLORIDA.98.4
40. GEORGIA.98.0
41. TENNESSEE.97.7
42. ARKANSAS.97.5
43. ARIZONA.97.4
44. NEVADA.96.5
45. ALABAMA.95.7
46. NEW MEXICO.95.7
47. HAWAII.95.6
48. CALIFORNIA.95.5
49. LOUISIANA.95.3
50. MISSISSIPPI.94.2
http://www.top50states.com/average-iq-score.html
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