OKLA. CITY —
Oklahoma City author and former Miss America Jane Jayroe has been awarded the Outstanding Achievement Award by Oklahoma City University’s Meinders School of Business. She and four other 2012 inductees will be honored at the annual Oklahoma Commerce and Industry Hall of Honor luncheon on Oct. 24 at the Cox Center in Oklahoma City.
Jayroe is the coauthor of an autobiography, “More Grace Than Glamour” and “Oklahoma III,” and has contributed articles to several national publications. A former Miss America, she was a television news anchor in Oklahoma City and Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas, and also served as Oklahoma Cabinet Secretary of Tourism. She is married to Gerald Gamble and lives in Oklahoma City.
Her latest book, a devotional titled “Devote Forty Days,” includes stories, insights, and reflections she hopes will enrich others’ lives as hers was. The devotions are coupled with stories from her life, as well as her friends’ lives, including First Ladies Cathy Keating and Donna Nigh, University of Oklahoma Women's Basketball Coach Sherri Coale, Linda Cavanaugh, Robin Marsh, Justice Yvonne Kauger, LaDonna Meinders, Nancy Ellis, Jane Thompson and more.
For more information, visit devotefortydays.
tateauthor.com.
Local News
OKC author, former Miss America receives award
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OG&E works to replace Edmond power poles
“Oh my God, it’s the tornado,” Betsy Herring thought as she and her husband, Lee, took shelter in their laundry room as Sunday’s tornado roared toward their Forest Oaks home in Edmond.
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Organizers postpone Jazz and Blues Festival
The 25th annual Edmond Jazz and Blues Festival scheduled for this weekend at Stephenson Park has been postponed due to the prospect of inclement weather and the ongoing recovery efforts of last Monday’s tornadoes.
Mark Neighbors, chairman of the Edmond Jazz and Blues Festival, said a final decision was made Thursday to postpone the festival until a later date this summer. -
3rd grader left ill-fated school with minutes to spare
Scott Lewis picked up his son, Zack, from Plaza Towers Elementary School as hail pounded the school Monday afternoon. About 5 minutes after they left, said Lewis, the monster tornado smashed into the building.
Seven of Zack’s third-grade classmates were killed when the tornado knocked down the school’s walls and ceilings. Others were injured; several remain hospitalized, Lewis said. -
Expert: Schools need shelters
Ninety-four percent of Oklahoma schools do not have tornado shelters, according to Gov. Mary Fallin, even though at least one weather expert says they should be standard. With two Moore schools destroyed in Monday’s EF-5 tornado — and ...
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Equine center aids Orr Family Farm horses
Connie Yearwood, a third-year veterinary student at Oklahoma State University, had been job shadowing at Equine Medical Association in Edmond when the call came to help rescue horses that were injured during Monday’s tornado in Moore and Oklahoma City.
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Lincoln County Emergency Management calls for help
Carney is a city of about 649 residents and following the recent tornado outbreak 20 homes were destroyed there and an additional 18 homes in the county were leveled.
Wednesday, a press release from Lincoln County, along with Wellston Emergency Management Office and the City of Carney, stated that at this time the needs have changed for the city. -
Oklahoma National Guard coordinates tornado relief support
Oklahoma National Guard members, who work side-by-side with local responders to aid in recovery efforts during domestic operations such as the May 20 tornado that tore through Oklahoma City and Moore, are given their tasks through the Guard's Joint Operations Center.
The JOC, located in the Guard's Joint Force Headquarters in Oklahoma City, is primarily responsible for the collection, dissemination and tracking of information to increase the situational awareness for leadership as well as the National Guard Bureau, said Lt. Col. Hiram Tabler, the director of military support for Oklahoma's Joint Force Headquarters. -
UPDATE: Businesses, groups offer free relief to tornado victims
Listed is information on free services offered to victims of the recent tornadoes.
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House approves $45M aid package for tornado victims
As rain poured this morning on disaster relief workers in the Moore and Oklahoma City areas, the Oklahoma House of Representatives unanimously approved a $45 million aid package to provide relief to those impacted by Monday’s EF-5 tornado.
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TIMELAPSE: Take a tour through the damage in Moore
Take a driving tour of the damage in Moore caused by Monday's tornado.
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