The City of Stillwater celebrated Martin Luther King Jr. Day with its annual community march.
Posts published in “News”
Members of President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace,” the committee that will oversee the reconstruction of Gaza, will receive a permanent seat if they pay $1 billion, according to a US official.
Tech giants are in a heated race to build data centers and dominate the AI landscape. But America might not be ready for the energy demand.
The AsSiddique Post weekly global news summary...
Stillwater and multiple Oklahoma State University sites plan to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day with events on Monday and Tuesday.
Barnes & Nobles will open in Stillwater. The 15,000-square-foot store will fill the space in the Bradford Plaza at 519 N. Main St.
The City of Stillwater plans to move forward with redesigning three intersections in downtown Stillwater.
The US and UK are reducing the number of personnel at the Al-Udeid air base in Qatar, as US President Donald Trump considers whether to take action against Iran over its crackdown on anti-government protests.
Sen. Brian Guthrie, R-Bixby, filed two pieces of legislation to further efforts to prohibit foreign land ownership in Oklahoma.
Senate Bill 1582 and Senate Joint Resolution 31 aim to close loopholes within state statute and the Oklahoma Constitution that allow aliens to obtain land.
Murad Wilfried Hofmann was a German diplomat and author. He wrote several books on Islam, including Journey to Makkah and Islam: The Alternative. Many of his books and essays focused on Islam's place in the West
Much less winter snow is falling on the Himalayas, leaving the mountains bare and rocky in many parts of the region in a season when they should be snow-clad, meteorologists have said.
Senator Christi Gillespie, R–Broken Arrow, released the following statement after the Broken Arrow City Council voted 4-to-1, denying a proposed development at the Olive Avenue and Creek Turnpike corridor.
Iran has warned it will retaliate if attacked by the US, as BBC sources and activists report hundreds of protesters have now been killed in an escalating government crackdown.
As a service to our readers, The AsSiddique Post provides a summary of all important news and events that took place in the previous week.
Intel, once the undisputed leader that both designed and manufactured processors, fell behind when it struggled with advanced 7 nm and 5 nm technologies while TSMC mastered cutting‑edge manufacturing and AMD shifted to a fabless model to leverage TSMC’s strengths. Now Intel is investing vast sums in new fabs, opening its foundries to external customers, and racing to catch up in artificial intelligence, raising the question of whether it can stage a comeback or if its era of dominance is permanently over.















