EDMOND —
The Board of Directors of Oklahoma Christian School recently announced the selection of Al King as school headmaster beginning July 1.
Former University of Central Oklahoma President W. Roger Webb has served as interim headmaster this school year.
King is currently director at Bingham Academy, an international Christian School in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, educating children from 37 nations. This will be his second time to work at Oklahoma Christian School, having taught Spanish at the school from 1997 to 2000.
King was born and raised in Wichita Falls, Texas, and graduated from Wentworth Military Academy in Lexington, Mo., in 1985. He attended the University of Oklahoma where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Journalism/Public Relations in 1989 and a Master’s of Arts degree in Journalism/Mass Media Management in 1991. In 2012 he received a doctorate in educational leadership from Columbia International University.
In 1989, as a college senior, King became a Christian through the ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ at OU. From 1991-95 he worked with a team that developed an urban Young Life ministry in South Oklahoma City. The team lived in the inner city and established a thriving Young Life club at Jackson Middle School.
It was during this time that he developed an interest in teaching, so King pursued an Oklahoma Teachers Certificate in K-12 Spanish Education through the University of Central Oklahoma, which he received in 1994. Subsequently, he taught Spanish in Putnam City Schools (1995-97), Oklahoma Christian School (1997-2000) and Academy District 20 in Colorado Springs (2000-04).
In 2004 King was hired as Crossings Christian School’s first headmaster where he served for seven years, until 2010.
He has been married to his wife Melissa for 18 years. The couple has three children, John-Paul, 15, Alexandra, 14, and Ellie, 4. In his spare time he enjoys fly fishing, hunting and cycling.
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OCS board announces selection of new headmaster
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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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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. -
Businesses offer free relief to tornado victims
Listed is information on free services offered to victims of the recent tornadoes.
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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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Moore mayor wants tornado shelters in new homes
Moore Mayor Glenn Lewis wants tornado shelters in all new homes in his city, where an EF-5 tornado damaged or destroyed more than 12,500 homes Monday afternoon. A proposed ordinance would require a shelter inside or outside each new residence.
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Rescue workers, tornado victims find respite in college dorms
Monday’s tornado put an estimated 20,000 people out of their houses, which were damaged or destroyed. Some of those victims — and the rescue workers who’ve come to help them — are staying a few miles south, in dormitories at the University of Oklahoma.
More than 300 individuals and families left homeless by the storm are staying at OU, where the university is providing beds, hot water and meals, often delivered by a familiar face. The university also housed 287 first-responders from Texas, Nebraska, Kansas and Tennessee. -
Mom delivered baby as tornado struck
Shayla Taylor’s second child was moments from birth as an EF-5 tornado bore down on Moore Medical Center on Monday afternoon.
Her labor was too far along to move her to safety with the rest of those in the hospital, her nurses decided. So as her husband, Jerome, and their 4-year-old son, Shaiden, went downstairs with the others, she and four nurses stayed upstairs and braced for the worst. -
Storm-weary residents return to their homes
Digging through the rubble of an unrecognizable city, people in this Oklahoma City suburb found familiar pieces of life before Monday’s tornado.
Work crews recovered a dresser that belonged to Rachel Hernandez from the remains of her home near Southeast Fourth Street and Bryant Avenue. Inside was a treasured photo of her grandmother at age 17.
“I had an entire collection of family photos in that dresser,” said Hernandez, who also salvaged a German antique pot, as well as some mementoes she didn’t recognize. -
Oklahoma tornado victims identified
Ten children — including two infants — are among those killed by a monster tornado that slashed through parts of Oklahoma City and this suburb Monday afternoon.
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Toll of Terror: Moore tornado by the numbers
The tale of the May 20 Moore and Oklahoma City tornado can partially be told just by the numbers. They include:
• 24: Killed, including 10 children. - More Local News Headlines
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