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In an April 19, 1995 file photo, Oklahoma City firefighter Chris Fields, 30, holds a baby who was thrown from first floor of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building at the Stars and Stripes Daycare ...
This tragedy would later be known as the Oklahoma City Bombing, the worst homegrown terrorist attack in the United States to date. There were 25 children in the building that was targeted by ...
From Bricktown to the Oklahoma City Thunder, OKC has transformed a lot over the last 30 years. Karl Torp looks at what made ...
Watch Eyewitness News coverage of the 1995 truck bombing outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma that killed 168 people.
Bob Hawthorne stood in front of the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum as the team rode by in open-top buses, just a few feet away from the empty chair bearing the name of his father, Thomas ...
For three decades, the strongest bond holding this city together was the shared trauma of the Oklahoma City bombing. Now, after reaching the ... celebrating what might be the happiest moment in the ...
It was April 19, 1995, when a truck bomb detonated outside a federal building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people in the deadliest homegrown attack on U.S. soil. Hartenstein didn't know much about ...
Thunder trace ties to tight-knit fan community to 1995 Oklahoma City bombing Most Thunder players weren't born when the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City was bombed 30 years ago.
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.