Seahawks WR Tyler Lockett "A Healthier Type Of Hungry" During Torrid Start To 2021 Season seahawks.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from seahawks.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
At Greenwood Rising, visitors can make a personal commitment toward racial reconciliation.
The Oklahoma city is looking forward while reckoning with its legacy. share this article
America’s cities are back: bigger, bolder, and packed full of exciting events, new outdoor spaces, and reimagined dining. Check out Cities We Love for inspiration this summer.
In May, all eyes were on Tulsa as the city marked the centennial of the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921. The attack in which mobs of white residents attacked Black residents and businesses in the city’s 35-block Greenwood District is believed to be the single deadliest and most destructive act of racial violence in U.S. history, and its scars are still evident in Oklahoma’s second-largest city, which sits on the Arkansas River. But for travelers looking to understand what it means to see “America,” perhaps there is no better city than one like Tulsa, which is looking forward while reckoning with the legacy of its past.
Seahawks receiver Tyler Lockett is raising money for Black-owned businesses while shedding a light on Black history with a series of bookmarks being sold through Tulsa’s Fulton Street Books & Coffee.
OU alumnus Carlos Moreno launched a children’s book about the Tulsa Race Massacre at Fulton Street Books and Coffee Tuesday afternoon in conjunction with Tulsa’s commemoration of the centennial to
Thousands gathered this weekend in Tulsa, Okla. to remember those killed 100 years ago in the Tulsa Race Massace. The events included concerts, marches and speeches from civil rights leaders including the Rev. Jesse Jackson.