As we speak is Wednesday, Nov. 16, the 320th day of 2022. There are 45 days left within the 12 months.
As we speak’s Spotlight in Historical past:
On Nov. 16, 1914, the newly created Federal Reserve Banks opened in 12 cities.
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On this date:
In 1907, Oklahoma turned the forty sixth state of the union.
In 1933, the USA and the Soviet Union established diplomatic relations.
In 1960, Academy Award-winning actor Clark Gable died in Los Angeles at age 59.
In 1961, Home Speaker Samuel T. Rayburn died in Bonham, Texas, having served as speaker since 1940 besides for 2 phrases.
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In 1982, an settlement was introduced within the 57th day of a strike by Nationwide Soccer League gamers.
In 1989, six Jesuit clergymen, a housekeeper and her daughter have been slain by military troops on the College of Central America Jose Simeon Canas in El Salvador.
In 1991, former Louisiana governor Edwin Edwards received a landslide victory in his bid to return to workplace, defeating State Rep. David Duke, a former Ku Klux Klan chief.
In 2001, investigators discovered a letter addressed to Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont containing anthrax; it was the second letter bearing the lethal germ recognized to have been despatched to Capitol Hill.
In 2004, President George W. Bush picked Nationwide Safety Adviser Condoleezza Rice to be his new secretary of state, succeeding Colin Powell.
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In 2006, Democrats embraced Nancy Pelosi as the primary feminine Home speaker in historical past, however then chosen Steny Hoyer as majority chief in opposition to her needs.
In 2018, a U.S. official mentioned intelligence officers had concluded that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had ordered the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi (jah-MAHL’ khahr-SHOHK’-jee).
In 2020, President-elect Joe Biden warned of dire penalties if President Donald Trump and his administration continued to refuse to coordinate together with his transition workforce on the coronavirus pandemic and stored blocking briefings on nationwide safety coverage points and vaccine plans; Biden instructed reporters, “Extra individuals might die if we don’t coordinate.”
Ten years in the past: Former CIA Director David Petraeus instructed Congress that categorised intelligence confirmed the Sept. 11, 2012 assault in Benghazi, Libya, that killed U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three different People was a terrorist assault, however that the Obama administration withheld the suspected function of al-Qaida associates to keep away from tipping them off.
5 years in the past: Minnesota Democratic Sen. Al Franken turned the primary member of Congress to be caught up in a wave of allegations of sexual abuse and inappropriate habits, after a Los Angeles radio anchor accused him of forcibly kissing her and groping her throughout a 2006 USO tour. (Franken would resign weeks later.) The federal bribery trial of Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey ended with the jury hopelessly deadlocked on all expenses. (Federal prosecutors determined to not retry him.) Jose Altuve of the World Champion Houston Astros received the American League Most Helpful Participant award; Giancarlo Stanton of the Marlins was the winner within the Nationwide League.
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One 12 months in the past: Hospitals in Michigan and Minnesota reported a wave of COVID-19 sufferers not seen in months as beds have been stuffed with unvaccinated individuals and well being care leaders warned that employees have been being worn down by one more surge. American journalist Danny Fenster, who spent practically six months in jail in military-ruled Myanmar, arrived again in the USA after former U.S. diplomat Invoice Richardson helped negotiate his launch. The U.S. Census Bureau introduced that Hartville, Missouri, was now the closest city to the middle of U.S. inhabitants distribution. Michelle Wu was sworn in as Boston’s first girl and first particular person of coloration elected mayor within the metropolis’s lengthy historical past.
As we speak’s Birthdays: Journalist Elizabeth Drew is 87. Blues musician W.C. Clark is 83. Actor Joanna Pettet is 80. Actor Steve Railsback is 77. Actor David Leisure is 72. Actor Miguel Sandoval is 71. Actor Marg Helgenberger is 64. Rock musician Mani is 60. Former professional tennis participant Zina Garrison is 59. Former MLB All-Star pitcher Dwight Gooden is 58. Jazz singer Diana Krall is 58. Actor Harry Lennix is 58. Rock musician Dave Kushner (Velvet Revolver) is 56. Actor Lisa Bonet (boh-NAY’) is 55. Actor Tammy Lauren is 54. Actor Martha Plimpton is 52. Actor Michael Irby is 50. Actor Missi Pyle is 50. Rock musician Corey McCormick (Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Actual) is 46. Olympic gold medal determine skater Oksana Baiul (ahk-SAH’-nah by-OOL’) is 45. Actor Maggie Gyllenhaal (JIHL’-ehn-hahl) is 45. Pop singer Trevor Penick is 43. Former NBA participant Amare Stoudemire (ah-MAR’-ay STOW’-duh-my-ur) is 40. Actor Kimberly J. Brown is 38. Rock singer Siva Kaneswaran (The Wished) is 34. Actor-comedian Pete Davidson is 29. Actor Casey Moss is 29. Actor Noah Grey-Cabey is 27.
Oklahoma City Thunder (13-4, first in the Western Conference) vs. Golden State Warriors (12-4, second in the Western Conference)
San Francisco; Wednesday, 10 p.m. EST
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BOTTOM LINE: Golden State hosts Oklahoma City aiming to extend its five-game home winning streak.
The Warriors are 9-3 against Western Conference opponents. Golden State is second in the Western Conference scoring 117.6 points while shooting 46.5% from the field.
The Thunder are 10-4 against Western Conference opponents. Oklahoma City averages 115.2 points while outscoring opponents by 11.3 points per game.
The 117.6 points per game the Warriors average are 13.7 more points than the Thunder give up (103.9). The Thunder are shooting 46.2% from the field, 3.3% higher than the 42.9% the Warriors’ opponents have shot this season.
TOP PERFORMERS: Draymond Green is shooting 43.1% and averaging 8.7 points for the Warriors.
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Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is scoring 29.2 points per game and averaging 5.1 rebounds for the Thunder.
LAST 10 GAMES: Warriors: 7-3, averaging 115.5 points, 50.1 rebounds, 29.9 assists, 8.6 steals and 5.0 blocks per game while shooting 45.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 112.2 points per game.
Thunder: 6-4, averaging 116.5 points, 40.8 rebounds, 25.5 assists, 11.3 steals and 6.3 blocks per game while shooting 46.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 109.6 points.
INJURIES: Warriors: Jonathan Kuminga: out (illness), De’Anthony Melton: out for season (acl).
Thunder: Chet Holmgren: out (hip), Ousmane Dieng: out (finger), Jaylin Williams: out (hamstring), Nikola Topic: out for season (acl), Alex Caruso: out (hip).
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
OKLAHOMA CITY – Yvonne Kauger’s interpretation of the law and the paths she’s blazed outside the courtroom have shaped the foundation of Oklahoma’s justice system for decades.
When the 87-year-old retires Dec. 1, she’ll collectively be the longest serving Oklahoma Supreme Court justice and staff attorney.
She’ll also be the first Oklahoma Supreme Court justice in state history to not be retained by voters following a dark money campaign that targeted her as a liberal judge and as being too old.
But being first isn’t new to Kauger.
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She was the first female staff attorney at the Oklahoma Supreme Court.
Gov. George Nigh appointed her to the Oklahoma Supreme Court in 1984, two years after he appointed the first female justice, the late Alma Wilson.
Kauger has spent 52 years working for the state’s highest court as either a judge or staff attorney.
Cases before the court ranged from the constitutionality of laws, taxes, abortion access and tribal issues, to name a few.
The same year as her appointment to the bench, she was adopted by the Cheyenne Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma on sacred tribal ground in Colony. Her family has deep ties to the tribe.
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“It’s more of an honorary position, but I was the first person since statehood to be adopted by the Cheyenne Arapaho,” Kauger said.
Kauger has no Native American blood, but always wanted to be an Indian, she said.
In 1987, she co-founded Red Earth, which features Native American culture, art and dancers.
The following year, she founded the Sovereignty Symposium. The national legal conference held in Oklahoma City educates people about tribal sovereignty and government.
She is known for asking tough and direct questions from those who appeared before the court during oral arguments and not letting attorneys off easy when they can’t answer.
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Former Oklahoma Chief Justice Steven Taylor introduced her when she was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame.
“No living Oklahoman has influenced the course of the law in our state more than Justice Yvonne Kauger,” Taylor said.
He said she guards the institutional foundation of the state’s highest court.
Chief Justice M. John Kane IV said he will be sad to lose her as a colleague.
“Her toughness, her kindness, her vision have been an institution in our court for my entire career,” said Kane, who was appointed by Gov. Kevin Stitt in 2019.
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Kauger has vivid and mostly fond memories of her childhood in Colony and young adult years. She played basketball in high school. She still has the faded newspapers showing her modeling the latest fashions when she was younger. She lost her sister in a plane crash as a young adult.
Kauger put herself through the Oklahoma City University School of Law, graduating first in her class in 1969.
She was instrumental in creating the online case tracking system for the state’s courts and transforming the old Wiley Post building that then housed the Oklahoma Historical Society into the Judicial Center.
Not being retained has advantages for Kauger, who plans to write at least two books and start a docent program for the Judicial Center, where she was instrumental in picking out the artwork.
“This is the most wonderful building and has one of the best Indian art collections,” said Kauger, who can see the state’s court building from her nearby home across the street from the Capitol. “We’ve told the history of the state through the art.”
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Her Taos Pueblo-style home, including the garage, is filled with art, whether it is paintings or sculptures. She is also an artist.
“I call it a new beginning,” Kauger said. “That iron curtain has dropped. I don’t bear a grudge. Sometimes I think it’s serendipitous because I probably would have never quit.”
Kauger has a tradition.
After every retention ballot, she purchases something for herself.
After one retention election, it was living room furniture. One year it was a car. This year, it was a zero-gravity heat massage chair.
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Kauger said she has no regrets about anything she has done. She said the job of the court is to follow the law based on the facts, regardless of what some might believe.
“Do right. Fear not,” is a motto she lives by.
Despite racking up an impressive list of firsts, honors and awards, Kauger said that is not her legacy.
“My legacy is my family,” she said, referring to daughter Jonna Kirschner, two grandchildren and a great grandson.
NORMAN — Kip Lewis must have something against the state of Alabama.
In September, he sealed Oklahoma’s unlikely comeback victory over Auburn with a Pick Six.
Saturday night, he repeated his heroics — this time to bury the No. 7-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide.
With Alabama down 17-3 and needing a score to get back into the game, Jalen Milroe didn’t see Lewis.
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The OU linebacker didn’t care.
He snatched the ball out of the way and outraced the Crimson Tide 49 yards the other way, stepping over a Milroe half-hearted tackle attempt en route to the end zone.
“(They) came out of a formation that we’ve been studying all week, and Coach (Zac) Alley had everybody prepared, nailing us down with the details,” Lewis said after the win. “And so I read my keys, did what I was supposed to, and I was proud that he threw, because I was like, ‘What if I’m standing right here?’ But you know, just finishing and making sure I get to the end zone after I caught it.”
Lewis and the Sooners never looked back, as the Pick Six put the exclamation point on the 24-3 win.
The redshirt sophomore burst onto the scene last year for Oklahoma by playing a crucial part in the goal line stand against Texas.
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Then in his first year as an established starter, Lewis has delivered in both of OU’s SEC wins.
And while he turns it on every Saturday, Lewis said the interceptions never come his way in practice.
“I drop (passes) in practice a lot,” Lewis said with a smile. “I drop ’em a lot, and I just say, ‘Hey guys, look, in a game, it’s a catch, don’t worry.’ That’s what I tell them all the time.”
Alley confirmed Lewis’ struggles to hold onto the ball during practice, but praised the growth the young linebacker has shown to play a key role at the heart of Oklahoma’s defense.
“I don’t know; he dropped them in pregame too,” Alley said with a smirk. “I think when the lights come on, he’s a different dude. He’s a true gamer. There’s not a lot of those guys. He’s a good practice player, no doubt about it, but man, when the lights are on and the stage is bright and matter, he’s at his best when it matters the most.”
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The interception from Lewis wasn’t the only contribution from the Sooners’ front seven.
They held Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe to just seven rushing yards, and OU’s defensive line and linebackers dictated play at the point of attack.
Lewis finished with no tackles, but he and fellow linebacker Danny Stutsman disrupted everything the Crimson Tide tried to do.
“I’m so proud of them. And the other guys like Kip,” Stutsman said. “Comes up big with a huge play. Just proud of him.”
Partly thanks to Lewis’ contributions, the Sooners are now bowl eligible.
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Oklahoma will be able to utilize those extra practices to continue to develop and be better prepared headed into 2025.
But for now, Lewis was just happy he could help deliver OU coach a signature win and send the seniors out in style.
“It’s really good. Just building momentum into going into next year, I think it’s gonna really say what this team is,” Lewis said. “Just some hard, gritty fighting team that’s never gonna quit, never gonna give up. A lot of people counted us out this season and thought we should just write it off. And so we had other plans.”