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The land nobody wanted had oil worth millions and sparked legal battles | Only in Oklahoma
Tulsa World· 6 days agoWhen he died in 1933 at the age of 92, Jackson Barnett was known as the "world's richest Indian"...
Chris Craiker, The Napa Valley Architex Angle: How climate change can be a political merry-go-round
Napa Valley Register· 2 days agoAvoiding politics in a column is always a challenge. Climate change is real: policies on how we deal...
NewFest Unveils Full Lineup For 4th Annual ‘Newfest Pride’ Summer Film Event
Deadline via Yahoo News· 3 days agoNewFest, a New York LGBTQ+ film and media organization, revealed the full lineup for their fourth...
Alex Hassilev, last original member of the ’60s folk trio the Limeliters, dies at 91
Los Angeles Times· 6 days agoThe band was second only to the Kingston Trio in its popularity during the peak years of the...
Island life for these unhoused San Diegans means few police — and many hazards
KPBS San Diego· 7 days agoResidents on this island are part of a growing trend of unhoused people flocking to the riverbed and...
I Make $100,000 a Year. How Much House Can I Afford?
MediaFeed via AOL· 3 days agoOn a salary of $100,000 per year, as long as you have minimal debt, you can afford a house priced at around $311,000 with a monthly payment of $2,333....
Mall stores on the move in Western New York
The Buffalo News· 3 days agoComings and goings continue at area shopping malls. Rally House, a national retailer selling official sports merchandise from major college and...
A Riotous, Edgy Alternative Fair About 1970s Art Returns to New York
ARTnews· 3 days agoFor the second year in a row, far from Frieze New York in Hudson Yards, the SoHo art dealer Eric...
Town Center at Boca Raton: Check out the two newest retailers opening this spring
Sun-Sentinel· 5 days agoAritzia sells clothing it says is designed “for every function and individual aesthetic,” crafted...
Opinion: Never forget past U.S. racist immigrant law passed out of fear, nativism, bigotry
Tulsa World· 5 days agoIn 1924, the U.S. Congress approved a bill that shaped American policy for decades. Named for the men who engineered its passage, it was a nasty, draconian piece of legislation ...