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archivesSection of county’s new $1.5 million road crumblesBy Traci Chapman A section of a $1.5 million road project completed last week by District 2 County Commissioner Don Young is already buckling. The estimated 30-foot section is part of a 15-mile asphalt overlay that starts on the south side of the El Reno Regional Airport and runs south to Union City and west from the airpark to Heaston. While failures can happen immediately after asphalt is laid, District 1 Commissioner Phil Carson said generally such issues are minor. Carson said failures are often the result of inadequate road preparation. GOP candidates tussle over issuesBy Carolyn Cole Four Oklahoma Senate candidates debated about education, lawsuit reform, transportation and water rights Tuesday as they sought support from Mustang voters. Moore resident Marty Gormley and Oklahoma City residents Melinda Daugherty, Steve Russell and Kyle Loveless presented their views before a crowd of more than 70 area residents in a forum held by the Canadian County Republican Party in Town Center. A fifth candidate, Republican Jerry Foshee, of Oklahoma City, was absent. No independent or Democrat candidates sought the seat. Lunch prices to climb for Mustang studentsBy Carolyn Cole Parents will pay 30 cents more per meal for their children to eat in Mustang school cafeterias this fall. Mustang School Board members approved the increase Wednesday night after school officials reported skyrocketing food prices and fuel costs are eating away at the Child Nutrition Department’s bottom line. Young defends spending, quality of road repair workBy Traci Chapman District 2 Commissioner Don Young defended his decision Tuesday to spend $1.5 million since April on a 15-mile Reno Road project. The work comes in the final weeks when “unlimited funds” are available to Young to spend as he sees fit. Traffic counts show number of vehicles increasing on city roadsBy Traci Chapman Vehicle counts released by Mustang city officials confirm what residents fighting traffic on city streets already know — there are more cars on local roads than ever before. “The numbers have definitely jumped,” Ward 1 Councilman Jay Adams said. “Although a lot of it is concentrated on the east side of the city, there are significant increases all along the state Highway 152 corridor.” Faithful builders - Holy Spirit Church celebrates 25 years of serviceBy Carolyn Cole Holy Spirit Catholic Church’s members invites Mustang to a free community-wide pancake breakfast Saturday morning in honor of the congregation’s silver anniversary. Parishioners will serve up pancakes, french toast, sausage and ham, along with juices and coffee from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. Saturday at the church, 1100 N. Sara Road. “We invite the community of Mustang to come out and eat on us,” said John Lippe, 25th anniversary activities chairman. ‘Military man through and through’ - Daughter remembers father lost during Vietnam WarBy Traci Chapman Shannon Wann still dreams about her father, a father who went to war when she was 9 years old and never came home. Chief Warrant Officer Donald Wann was a “military man through and through,” a man who volunteered to serve long before war came to a faraway place called Vietnam and a soldier who signed up for two tours of duty once war broke out. He was awarded 152 air medals, two Purple Hearts, the Bronze Star, a Good Conduct Award and the Vietnam Medal. Sifting through secrets - Father’s death on mission leaves daughter searching for answersBy Rex Hogan Karen Daughtry remembers her father, Lt. Col. Clarence Blanton, telling her in 1968 that he was going to Laos to work as a civilian. “He told me he was going to Laos, that he had a desk job and would be sharing a house with other men,” she said. The Air Force knew that story wasn’t true. High-ranking Central Intelligence Agency officials knew too. Following the storms - Soldier’s deployment to Pacific came as World War II came to closeBy Carolyn Cole World War II veteran Vernon Herschberger counts himself among the lucky — he was deployed late in the war, which may have saved his life. Herschberger was assembling aircraft for Boeing in Wichita, Kan., when he was drafted into the Army Air Corps — the precursor of the Air Force. His job was putting the skin on B-29 bombers at that time. His division had just started building gliders used by the Army in Europe as a one-time transport of soldiers to the front. Two war veteran glad to see attitude toward service has changedBy Rex Hogan Without servicemen and women, there would be no Fourth of July celebration. That’s the way El Reno VFW Navy and Army veteran Don Douglas sees it. Douglas served in both World War II and the Korean War. In 1950, he joined the Army. “They were calling people up for Korea and I volunteered,” Douglas said. Recent IssuesSpecial Sections |
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