The Life and Times of Herman Workman
This week we have the Indian Pioneer Paper of Herman Workman. This interview was taken by WPA field worker Maurice Anderson in 1937 at Mr. Workman’s residence in Paoli, OK.
This week we have the Indian Pioneer Paper of Herman Workman. This interview was taken by WPA field worker Maurice Anderson in 1937 at Mr. Workman’s residence in Paoli, OK.
Me-Way-Seh Hunter Greenwood, Margaret Roach Wheeler, Brent Greenwood, Joanna Underwood Blackburn and Taloa Underwood, from left, all played a role in the creation of Sulphur’s new downtown mural on the side of Mahota Textiles. Brent and his son Me-Way-Seh put the final touches on the wall Saturday, Oct. 17.
Pedestrians and drivers can view the brightly colored public art of Brent Greenwood at the corner of Muskogee Ave. and West 3rd St. in downtown Sulphur. The depictions of the mural were inspired by Mahota Textiles designers Margaret Roach Wheeler, Taloa Underwood and Joanna Underwood Blackburn and include motifs such as the woodpecker, sweet grass, sun circles and river.
Chickasaw artist Brent Greenwood, with the help of his son Me-Way-Seh Hunter Greenwood, put the finishing touches on a downtown Sulphur mural inspired by Mahota Textiles Saturday, Oct. 17.
Looking back on the unprecedented events, hardships, challenges and losses we’ve navigated this year, certainly everyone would agree that 2020 has been a roller coaster experience none of us asked for or wanted. While it will take time to recover and find our way back to normal, I want to encourage you to remember that there is always reason to have hope in what the future can hold in America.
As your elected District Attorney, I urge you to VOTE NO on State Question 805 for the following reasons. 805 offers a Constitutional guarantee to repeat felony offenders that they will not have to face a greater range of punishment than first time felony offenders. It is really that simple. For example, if 805 passes, then a 5 time second degree burglar (i.e. someone who breaks into your house when you aren’t home) will be constitutionally protected from having to face a stiffer range of punishment than a 1st time second degree burglar. The same would be true for a 5 time felony domestic abuser and a 5 time felony drunk driver. 805 would constitutionally protect these types of recidivist criminals from facing a harsher range of punishment than 1st time felony domestic abusers and drunk drivers. As the law currently reads, a 5 time second degree burglar faces an “enhanced” penalty of 4 years to life. That’s correct, a 5 time second degree burglar could receive as little as 4 years in prison for his crime, and given that second degree burglary is considered a “non-violent” offense, such an offender would likely be released in less than a year if not within ninety days on an ankle monitor. That’s hardly an excessive sentence. In fact, the 4 year minimum sentence is true in regards to pretty much every “non-violent” recidivist felony offender, and that’s the truth, regardless of all the misinformation being disseminated on this topic.
I call myself 90, but I don’t know just how old I really am but I was a good sized gal when we moved from Georgia to Texas. We come on a big boat and one night the stars fell. Talk about being scared! We all run and hid and hollered and prayed. We thought the end of the world had come.
P.O. Box 131
Sulphur, OK 73086
PH: (580) 622-2102