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The Thunder didn't even exist in Oklahoma City when the 1995 bombing happened; the franchise that had been known as the Seattle SuperSonics didn't relocate to America's heartland until more than a ...
The Thunder have taken great pains to not ignore the impact the April 19, 1995 bombing had, and has, on Oklahoma City.
I’ve lived in Oklahoma City the majority of my life. I was born here. I was here for the bombing. I’ve weathered the ...
It’s a Thunder rule: To work in Oklahoma City, you must learn about OKC and what the bombing meant to the city ...
If Oklahoma City is unexpectedly liberal and welcoming, that is perhaps in part a legacy of the bombing itself. The price of political extremism is never far from residents’ minds.
Fans gathered outside the Alfred P. Murrah Memorial in downtown Oklahoma City for the OKC Thunder championship parade Tuesday.
For three decades, the strongest bond holding this city together was the shared trauma of the Oklahoma City bombing. Now, after reaching the pinnacle of sports competition — a championship in ...
The Thunder didn’t even exist in Oklahoma City when the bombing happened; the franchise that had been known as the Seattle SuperSonics didn’t relocate to America’s heartland until more than ...
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Isaiah Hartenstein was born in 1998, three years after Oklahoma City changed forever. It was April 19, 1995, when a truck bomb detonated outside a federal building in ...
The Thunder didn’t even exist in Oklahoma City when the bombing happened; the franchise that had been known as the Seattle SuperSonics didn’t relocate to America’s heartland until more than ...
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Isaiah Hartenstein was born in 1998, three years after Oklahoma City changed forever. It was April 19, 1995, when a truck bomb detonated outside a federal building in ...