On April 19, 1995, 168 people were killed when a 4,800-pound bomb detonated at the north entrance of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City.
He was a poker-faced killer in a crewcut, and all across America people were asking the same question: Who is this guy? The public's first glimpse came two days after the bombing, on April 21, 1995: ...
Oklahoma State University Agriculture held a special edition of its Dean’s Dialogue series in January to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building bombing in ...
One need look no further than to Texas and Oklahoma, where Rodney Terry and Porter Moser have coached their way into very difficult positions. If you study bracketology, you know the Longhorns and ...
It includes stunning items like the Anna Showerproof Bomber Jacket - a piece that fuses a timeless bomber design with Barbour's renowned weather resistance to create an effortlessly cool ...
Terry was born in Dumas, Arkansas on July 1, 1966, to Dorothy Jean Marks and Raymond Augusta Nichols, Sr. Her family described her in three words, charismatic, loving, and creative. Terry loved ...
With significant snow on the way, the City of Tulsa is preparing for the worst. Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols signed an emergency declaration for the city because of the incoming inclement winter ...
On April 19, 1995, during the presidency of Bill Clinton, a devastating truck bomb attack occurred at ... along with accomplice Terry Nichols, orchestrated the attack, motivated by a deep-seated ...
Oklahoma City bombing defendants Terry Nichols (L), shown on May 10, 1995, and Timothy McVeigh (R), shown on April 10, 1995. Nichols, one of the main conspirators, lived in Decker, Michigan ...