Moksha Sommer, left, and Jemal Wade Hines of HuDost open their performance with electric folk music during the first Levitt Amp Clinton Concert Series last week at the Clinton Middle School Auditorium.
HONOLULU (AP) — Kilauea, one of the most active volcanoes in the world, began erupting on Wednesday after a three-month pause, displaying spectacular fountains of mesmerizing, glowing lava that's a safe distance from people and structures in a national park on the Big Island.
Here are the daily specials being offered by Clinton eating establishments:
Here's your preview of Thursday's CDN
- City preps for two large expenditures
- Public pool opens after delays
- West Ok Pride Festival set for this Saturday
- Senior proud of team’s championship legacy
- State, local, national news, sports and more
The Western Oklahoma Pride Festival will kick off at noon Saturday at McLain Rogers Park with special speakers, performers and an art show along with various food trucks and other vendors. With final preparations underway, event organizers say safety has been a top focus as they prepare for the first-ever event of its kind in Clinton.
Grace Meacham, left, and Addyson Littke recently attended the Hugh O’Brian Youth Leadership Conference (HOBY). The conference was held at the University of Central Oklahoma June 1-4 and it is designed for students entering their junior year of high school to grow leadership as well as service traits.
As City officials work to finalize a budget for the next fiscal year beginning July 1, a public hearing was held Tuesday night during the regular meeting of the Clinton City Council. With big projects on the horizon like the Exit 65 interchange and the continuing work to reopen the hospital, City Manager Robert Johnston said the City’s budget for this next year reflects that.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio's rich history of aviation innovation makes it an ideally suited location for the Air Force's new U.S. Space Command headquarters or Space Force units, a group of the state's congressional delegates told Democratic President Joe Biden in a letter Wednesday.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A state board in Oklahoma voted Wednesday to deny recommending clemency for a man convicted of stabbing a Tulsa woman to death with a butcher knife in 1995, clearing the way for his planned execution next month.


