TEMPORARY CLOSURE:
The Almonte Library will be closed Sat., 5/4 through Tue., 5/14, to prepare for their grand reopening in their new building on Wed., 5/15 at 10 AM.
Archive
'Zines: A Quick but Comprehensive Chronology
An essay written by Granny Anarchy for the Underground Music Archive.
Carrie Leslie, Denyevetta Davis, and Tiffany Legg
Carrie Leslie, OU Environmental Studies Capstone Instructor, Denyvetta Davis, JFK Neighborhood Association President, and Tiffany Legg, OU Environmental Studies Capstone Co-Instructor
UMAmi 003: September 2023
The third issue of the monthly music zine by the Oklahoma Underground Music Archive.
JFK Neighborhood Association Members
JFK Neighborhood Association Members Eva King, Marion West, Rodney Redus (JFK Neighborhood Association Vice President), and Cresha Redus
Personal History interview with Marti Rickman
A personal history interview with Marti Rickman, by students at Oklahoma City University in an Intermediate Spanish class led by Dr. Mark Griffin.
JFK Neighborhood Association Conversation - Sharable Version
A more concisely edited version of the conversation with the JFK Neighborhood Association.
Excessive Subsurface Vibration Report in the JFK Neighborhood of OKC
Excessive Subsurface Vibration Report
Zoning Decisions and Legal History in the JFK Neighborhood of OKC
A report by the 2023 OU Environmental Studies Capstone Class.
UMAmi Issue 004 (October 2023)
The 4th issue of UMAmi, a monthly music zine, published in October 2023.
Granny Anarchy's Guide to the Clash
An essay introducing the musical group The Clash and how best to become acquainted with their history and music, by Granny Anarchy for UMAmi Zine November 2023.
Oral History: Dianne McDaniel
An oral history interview with Dianne McDaniel on being a part of the JFK neighborhood since 1985.
Oral History: Lee Roland
An oral history interview with Lee Roland about living in the JFK neighborhood.
Oral History: Stefan Kovash
Stefan Kovash talks about his time working at the Bowery, and seeing punk and alternative bands like X, The Replacements, Wall of Voodoo, and R.E.M come through Oklahoma City in the 1980s.